The Nuva Ring cannot get "stuck." It can move further up the vagina but will stop at the opening of your uterus.
If you can't reach it, try squatting to bring the end of the vagina closer to the opening and bear down; that maneuver is likely to help you reach it better. All you need to do is hook one finger behind it -- it's too slippery to grab.
If you (or your partner) can't remove it, see your health care provider at your convenience -- there's no need to panic. Getting it out within the week will be soon enough.
If you can't feel it at all, you may have lost it. In that case, consider emergency contraception, use a back up Birth Control method until you figure out if it's been in as prescribed, and consider a pregnancy test in ten days.
No. NuvaRing does not affect the accuracy of a pregnancy test. That is true whether or not the ring is in place. The pregnancy test looks for a hormone that is not found in NuvaRing.
My bf cannot (and he is large) and the nuvaring website said 90% cannot too. I still don't understand how he can't feel it, but he cant.
Yes, you should remove or replace the NuvaRing on schedule regardless of any bleeding.
Yes, you can use yeast infection cream while using NuvaRing. There's no need to remove the ring for treatment.
After 29 days wearing the Nuvaring, you remove it (for 7 days). Then you get your period and you use the softcups. You're period is already over, when you have to insert a new Nuvaring. So you''ll never have to wear both at the same time. a user of both ;-)
If you leave out NuvaRing for a day, replace it with a new ring and use a back up method of birth control, like condoms or abstinence from vaginal sex, for seven days. It is best not to remove NuvaRing until the ring-free week.
Answer 2:In order for the NuvaRing to be effective, you must use it the way it supposed to be used. You must NOT remove it the day after having unprotected sex. If it does not stay in for the entire three weeks after you put it in, it is NOT effective.Answer 1:Basically, yes. But you must visit a doctor to see why it makes you sick and what to use instead. Also, sex with Nuvaring is not unprotected sex. You protected, with Nuvaring :-).I would say it is pretty clear to anyone that the NUvaring should be used as described in the manual in order to be effective for future time. The question here, however, is if taking the Nuvaring out has consequences on being still protected from the effects of a previous sexual intercourse. The Nuvaring did its job during the intercourse, and is of course not protecting you any further if you take it out.
You insert NuvaRing in the vagina.
Urine does not affect NuvaRing.
Yes, but if you're doing so just to prove you're not pregnant, reconsider. Just take a pregnancy test instead, and continue using the NuvaRing on schedule. If you're trying to change the date of your period, just use the NuvaRing without taking the week-long break, rather than stopping the NuvaRing early and putting yourself at risk of pregnancy. Contact your health care provider for advice specific to your situation. If you want to stop NuvaRing, it's fine to remove it early. There's no other reason that I can think of in which removing NuvaRing early makes sense.
NuvaRing contains etonorgestrel and ethinyl estradiol.
When NuvaRing is in, it is releasing hormones in your body. When you take out NuvaRing that hormone level goes down, and you have bleeding or spotting.